skew

skew
/ skyoō/
•
adj.
1.
neither parallel nor at right angles to a specified or implied line; askew; crooked:
his hat looked slightly skewa skew angle. ∎ Statistics
(of a statistical distribution) not symmetrical.
2. Math.
(of a pair of lines) neither parallel nor intersecting. ∎
(of a curve) not lying in a plane.
•
n.
an oblique angle; a slant. ∎
a bias toward one particular group or subject:
the paper had a working-class skew. ∎ Statistics
the state of not being symmetrical.
•
v. [intr.]
suddenly change direction or position:
the car had skewed across the track. ∎
twist or turn or cause to do this:
he skewed around in his saddle |
[tr.]
his leg was skewed in and pushed against the other one. ∎ [tr.]
make biased or distorted in a way that is regarded as inaccurate, unfair, or misleading:
the curriculum is skewed toward the practical subjects. ∎
[tr.] Statistics
cause (a distribution) to be asymmetrical.
DERIVATIVES:skew·ness
n.

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skew

skew In a sequential circuit, the arrival of a signal at two or more places at significantly different times, when it should have arrived at more nearly the same time. Skew is said to be present when the difference in arrival times is great enough to cause or threaten malfunction of the circuit; this difference (usually measured in nanoseconds) is called the amount of skew. Most commonly, concern is expressed about clock skew, which is the skew in clock signals (for which the phenomenon has usually the most serious consequences). Skew may be caused by component malfunction, or bad physical construction, but most often by bad logic design of the circuit. See also race condition.

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